I’ve said before that Abe should be named the patron Saint of this game.
Irving Kahn passed away on Tuesday at the age of 109. He was, until his death, the oldest active investment professional, in addition to being one of the oldest men in the world. (The list of supercentenarians - persons living past their 110th birthday - is almost exclusively female.) He and his three siblings all lived past 100, which made them of interest to scientists studying longevity. His older sister Helen also lived to the age of 109.
He’d be a good choice. He’s been on people’s Death Pool lists as long as there’s been a SDMB Death Pool. I’m convinced his purpose in life is to tease Death Pool players.
ETA: The top of a new page is a good place to link to Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2015 page.
Just so you know, not everyone gets a page break at the same place; it depends how you have your options set.
Will this hit Sheldon harder than Professor Proton’s death?
My first points of any Death Pool ever. Why did it have to e Leonard Nimoy? I wasn’t a Trekkie, but I loved In Search Of…
Former New York Knick Anthony Mason dead at 52 points. This would have been a good year to have a basketball themed list.
Mrs. Plant (v.2.0), a Star Trek fan, would not let me add him five years ago. I never had the heart to add him later, just as I could not add Ann Francis or Koko Taylor.
And besides, none of them were very many points, but, Points is Points.
Star Trek was not the first time Leonard Nimoy and William Shatner appeared together on-screen. That was in a single episode of a 1964 episode of spy series The Man From U.N.C.L.E. called “The Project Strigas Affair.” Shatner played a freewheeling pest control owner, Michael Donfield, tasked with catching Communist spies like Nimoy’s character, Vladeck.
Vladeck. What a Commie name!
As I understand it, there was an episode of Mission Impossible where Nimoy’s character said that to Graves’ character (Jim Phelps).
Tru dat, but I’ll bet most people just leave it on the default of 50. The rest of you can deal with us somehow; I have confidence in you.
Minnie Minoso, who hit a two-run home run in his first at-bat when he became major league baseball’s first black player in Chicago in 1951, has died, the Cook County medical examiner said Sunday.
Minoso was 92 years old.
Charlie Sifford, Earl Lloyd, Minnie Monoso. Three athletes who share a common bond of pioneering integration of their sport. All died within the last few weeks.
He was a good ball player. I remember when The White Sox brought him back when in his 50’s to play a little.
Hooray for a tragic loss!
Might have missed me because I listed him as “Bob”?
There’s some confusion regarding what year he was born. Some say 1922, others say '24, and some others say '25.
Baker: He is in the scorekeeper as Bob, and listed under Randy Seltzer’s picks as Bob.
Points are forthcoming…
Of the Going, Gone Sox.
I missed a unique one last month:
Died: Steve Hayner, Former President of InterVarsity and Columbia Seminary at 66
1 Fear Itself 147 3 1
2 phungi 118 2 0
2 Registered at Last 118 2 0
2 RTFirefly 118 2 0
5 It’s Not Rocket Surgery 92 2 1
6 candide 83 2 0
6 carnivorousplant 83 2 0
8 notfrommensa 68 2 0
8 Sami41 68 2 0
10 MadTheSwine 61 2 0
10 Quartz 61 2 0
12 bassett hound 51 1 0
12 bowler girl 51 1 0
12 Captain Klutz 51 1 0
12 critter42 51 1 0
12 Dr. Girlfriend 51 1 0
12 Fleetwood 51 1 0
12 Happy Lendervedder 51 1 0
12 Hockey Monkey 51 1 0
12 Hoopy Frood 51 1 0
12 irritant 51 1 0
12 Kitten Mitten 51 1 0
12 Little Nemo 51 1 0
12 Loach 51 1 0
12 minionkat 51 1 0
12 RobotDevilDog 51 1 0
12 Squonk 51 1 0
12 Tim R. Mortiss 51 1 0
12 Yllaria 51 1 0
12 zoog 51 1 0
31 CAMJAY77 38 1 1
32 Randy Seltzer 30 1 1
33 Vashbul 25 1 1
34 Little Pig 18 1 1
35 Clothahump 17 1 0
35 GIGObuster 17 1 0
35 Honey 17 1 0
35 Rivkah Chaya 17 1 0
35 Shoeless 17 1 0
40 Grits and Hard Toast 10 1 0
40 Icarus 10 1 0
42 Dusty Rose 6 1 0
42 Lok 6 1 0
42 missred 6 1 0
45 Andrew21 0 1 1